Compatible stereoscopic video delivery

ABSTRACT

Stereoscopic images are subsampled and placed in a “checkerboard” pattern in an image. The image is encoded in a monoscopic video format. The monoscopic video is transmitted to a device where the “checkerboard” is decoded. Portions of the checkerboard (e.g., “black” portions) are used to reconstruct one of the stereoscopic images and the other portion of the checkerboard (e.g., “white” portions) are used to reconstruct the other image. The subsamples are, for example, taken from the image in a location coincident to the checkerboard position in which the subsamples are encoded.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/082,217, filed 20 Jul. 2008, hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Field of Invention

The present invention relates to video coding and more particularly to stereoscopic video coding.

Description of Related Art

In recent years, content providers have become considerably interested in the delivery of stereoscopic (3D) content into the home. This interest is driven by the increased popularity and production of 3D material, but also the emergence of several stereoscopic devices that are already available to the consumer. Although several systems have been proposed on the delivery of stereoscopic material to the home that combine specific video view “arrangement” formats with, primarily, existing video compression technologies such as ISO MPEG-2, MPEG-4 AVC/ITU-T H.264, and VC-1, these systems do not provide any information on how the video encoding process should be performed. This has consequently resulted in poorly designed stereo video encoding solutions with subpar performance, which has been detrimental in the adoption of such systems.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present inventors have realized the need to provide an existing format compliant 3D delivery system. Roughly described, the present invention provides a 3D delivery system that is backward compatible with existing monoscopic delivery systems. This allows, for example, a Blu-ray video disc to be encoded under the Blu-ray format with Stereoscopic data with the capability to be played on an ordinary Blue Ray player and feed a 3D compatible display device for viewing by the consumer. The present invention may be practiced by all other monoscopic formats including, for example, DVD formats, HD-DVD, the MPEG family, JPEG, etc.

In one embodiment, the present invention provides a method comprising the step of embedding a stereoscopic signal in a monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure. In one embodiment, the embedded stereoscopic signal comprises a video format where pixels from a first and a second image are stored in a “checkerboard” pattern within the monoscopic compatible video infrastructure.

In one embodiment, the method further comprises the step of reducing pixels of a pair of stereoscopic images to be embedded in the video infrastructure. The step of reducing pixels comprises, for example, subsampling the pair of stereoscopic images and placing the subsamples in a frame of the video infrastructure. The step of reducing pixels comprises filtering the pair of stereoscopic images and mixing the filtered images into a single frame of the video infrastructure. The subsampling may be performed, for example on coincident samples of the images, related samples of the images, and/or the subsampling of a first of the stereoscopic images is offset from the subsampling of a second of the stereoscopic images. In one embodiment, the locations of subsampling of a first of the stereoscopic images is alternated with locations of subsampling of a second of the stereoscopic images.

The method further comprises, for example, the step of arranging the subsamples in a lattice structure in a frame of the video infrastructure. Each subsample is placed, for example, in a corresponding location in the lattice structure occupied by the subsample in the image from which it was subsampled. The monoscopic compatible infrastructure comprises, for example, any of a Blu-ray compatible video format, and HD-DVD compatible video format, an Internet transmission format, a Direct-TV compatible video format, any of the MPEG family of formats, and an ATSC compatible video format.

In another embodiment, the present invention comprises a method, comprising the steps of, reducing pixels of a pair of stereoscopic images, formatting the reduced pixels into an image pattern, and encoding the image pattern as a frame in a monoscopic video format. The step of reducing pixels comprises, for example, subsampling the stereoscopic images. The subsampling comprises, for example, sampling half of the pixels in a first of the stereoscopic images and subsampling half of the pixels in a second of the stereoscopic images.

In various embodiments, the image pattern comprises a lattice pattern of pixels comprising a checkerboard wherein “black” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived from a first image of the stereoscopic pair of images and “white” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived from a second image of the stereoscopic pair of images. A location of the pixels in the lattice pattern comprises, for example, a coincident location in the image from which they were derived.

The method further comprises, for example, the step of decoding the “black” pixels into a first channel of a stereoscopic image and decoding the “white” pixels into a second channel of the stereoscopic image.

The present invention may also be embodied in an encoding device, comprising, an input port configured to receive a bit pattern comprising stereoscopic image pairs to be encoded, and an encoder configured to place at least portions of each stereoscopic image pair into a monoscopic-compatible video encoded bit stream. The encoder is configured, for example, to produce a lattice structure comprising portions of each image of a stereoscopic image pair. The lattice structure is produced, for example, by reduction and reordering of pixels comprising alternately subsampling each of the images and placing the subsamples in locations of a lattice structure corresponding to the locations of the image from which they were subsampled. The monoscopic-compatible video encoded bit stream comprises at least one of an ATSC format, a Blu-ray format, an HD-DVD format, an existing video format, one of the MPEG family of formats, and another video format.

The invention may also be embodied as a decoding device, comprising, an input port configured to receive a monoscopic formatted image signal, a processor configured to decode the monoscopic formatted image signal, and an image separator configured to extract a first image from each frame of the decoded monoscopic formatted image signal and extract a second image from each frame of the decoded monoscopic formatted image. The decoding device further comprises, for example, an image extractor configured to extract and expand each image to a full frame of a target device. The target device comprises, for example, at least one of a display, an HDTV display, a cinema display, a cell phone display, a computer display. The decoding device may further be part of a larger media system comprising a display and the image expander is configured to extract pixels for expansion in for each image from a checkerboard pattern within the decoded monoscopic formatted image.

The invention may also be embodied in any device or method that receives a monoscopic formatted video and extracts and displays the multiple images in any format. In one embodiment, the multiple images are extracted from a checkerboard pattern within the monoscopic formatted image and then display as a 3D video.

Portions of both the devices and methods, and/or other embodiments, may be conveniently implemented in programming on a general purpose computer, or networked computers, and the results may be displayed on an output device connected to any of the general purpose, networked computers, or transmitted to a remote device for output or display. In addition, any components of the present invention represented in a computer program, data sequences, and/or control signals may be embodied as an electronic signal broadcast (or transmitted) at any frequency in any medium including, but not limited to, wireless broadcasts, and transmissions over copper wire(s), fiber optic cable(s), and co-ax cable(s), etc.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

A more complete appreciation of the invention and many of the attendant advantages thereof will be readily obtained as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:

FIG. 1A is a block diagram illustrating a basic structure according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 1B is a diagram of an encoder according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 1C is a diagram of a system for encoding and decoding images according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 1D is a diagram of system for encoding, decoding and displaying images according to an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 2 is a diagram illustrating a system topology according to an embodiment of the present invention; and

FIG. 3 is an illustration of an image lattice structure according to an embodiment of the present invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Many current consumer stereoscopic systems require additional processes—either as hardware devices or software applications—that the consumer must purchase and install. This presents a significant barrier to market for the consumer and to the studios.

The present inventors have realized an implementation that allows the transmission of a stereoscopic signal in a manner reusing the existing television and video infrastructure by embedding the stereoscopic signal in a monoscopic-compatible signal. Using such an implementation, content distributors would then be able to deploy stereoscopic theatrical content into the home in order to exploit the marketing effort as close to the theatrical release date as possible.

The present invention creates a method of distribution that can fit in the current HD-DVD or Blu-ray, broadcast, and other distribution infrastructures and also allows flexibility for future systems. Specifically, a future system could allow full bandwidth stereoscopic signals to be transmitted while still maintaining backward compatibility with legacy stereoscopic devices. In this invention, a method of encoding stereoscopic signals is combined with a number of image coding and picture structuring techniques in a novel way.

Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate identical or corresponding parts, and more particularly to FIG. 1A thereof, there is illustrated a basic structure according to an embodiment of the present invention. The left and right images 101/102 comprise 2 still images or two image streams representing the left and right images of a stereoscopic production. As illustrated at 103, the images are encoded and packaged in a compliant means onto, for example, a standard HD-DVD or Blu-ray disc. The resulting stereoscopic data appears as a standard image and can be presented to a display in its encoded form. The display decodes the stereoscopic data back into its left and right image forms, where they are displayed (e.g., HDTV 104) where they appear as left and right images 105/106.

FIG. 1B is a diagram of an encoder according to an embodiment of the present invention. Stereoscopic images 110 are fed to an encoder 115. The images are packaged as a monoscopic format 120. The monoscopic format comprises an existing monoscopic format, for example, a Blu-ray format, an ATSC broadcast, or other formats.

FIG. 1C is a diagram of a system for encoding and decoding images according to an embodiment of the present invention. Stereoscopic images 110 are fed to an encoder 115. The images are packaged as a monoscopic format 120. The stereoscopic images are, for example, a series of left and right channel images of a 3D video. The monoscopic format comprises a monoscopic video signal where in each frame of the video is packaged with the left and right channel images from each frame of the 3D video (monoscopic packaged 3D video signal).

A monoscopic decoder 125 includes at least one port for receiving a monoscopic video, and is fed the monoscopic packaged 3D video signal. The at least one port comprises, for example, any of an HDMI port, antenna port, S-Video connector, a cable connector, video/audio component or composite connectors, network connector, 802.11 wireless, etc. In some embodiments related to transmission or carrier (e.g., 802.11), the monoscopic video signal is further packaged within the related transmission or carrier transport protocol and an additional device for extracting the monoscopic signal from the transport protocol and/or other protocols (not shown) is utilized. Ultimately, the monoscopic packaged 3D signal is received by the monoscopic decoder 125.

The monoscopic decoder 125 decodes the monoscopic packaged 3D signal according to the standard of the monoscopic format (e.g., Blu-ray, ATSC, etc). The decoded signal is a monoscopic video in which the images of the video are pattern decompressed images 130. That is, each image or frame of the decoded signal is a pattern image where the pattern comprises left and right channel images of the original stereoscopic images 110.

A separator 135 follows a set or variable pattern in which the images are embedded in the decoded signal (pattern decompressed images 130) and extracts the original (original compressed and then decompressed) images (e.g., left and right channel images). The separator 135 may be a separate device or may be packaged as part of a decoding system 140.

FIG. 1D is a diagram of system for encoding, decoding and displaying images according to an embodiment of the present invention. The monoscopic decoder 125 decodes the monoscopic packaged 3D signal according to the standard of the monoscopic format (e.g., Blu-ray, ATSC, etc). The decoded signal is a monoscopic video in which the images of the video are pattern decompressed images 130. That is, each image or frame of the decoded signal is a pattern image where the pattern comprises left and right channel images of the original stereoscopic images 110.

A pattern recognizer 150 identifies an input signal as being either a standard monoscopic video encoded signal or a multi-image (e.g., stereo) encoded signal. The recognition may be performed, for example, by comparing adjacent or otherwise related pixels in the decompressed pattern or constructing entire images based on a 3D encoded monoscopic pattern and comparing the resulting images.

Based on the recognition, the signal is then processed accordingly (e.g., the signal is routed to 2D display processing 155 for standard monoscopic video or the signal is routed to 3D display processing 160 for monoscopic packaged 3D), the results of which are then provided to and displayed on display 165. In one embodiment, the pattern recognizer and associated processing/processing devices are packaged together in a display (e.g., HDTV), as, for example, system 170. In another embodiment, the monoscopic decoder is also packaged together with the display (system 175).

FIG. 2 is a diagram illustrating a system topology 200 according to an embodiment of the present invention. In FIG. 2, two images are presented to the apparatus, one taken from the left perspective and the other from the right perspective both together forming a stereoscopic pair. These two images are, for example, low pass filtered 210A/210B and sub-sampled 215A/215B by, for example, a factor of two. The sub-sampling operation produces left and right samples (e.g., pixels) from the left and right images. The sub-sampling operation may be done in and may occur on coincident locations on both left and right images or the sampled locations can be offset from one image to the other. The preferred embodiment is to use offset sampling as shown in the lattice (or checkerboard) structure described below.

The sampled image data is then arranged into a 3D image lattice structure by lattice structure device/processor 220. The 3D image lattice structure is shown in FIG. 3. The left and right samples are arranged in alternating order within each line and then in the opposite order in the next line. This pattern is repeated throughout the lattice. The lattice structure aids in providing increased resolution in both the horizontal and vertical dimensions upon image decoding with the described system. Rather than reducing resolution in one dimension, the resolution is reduced in both dimensions but by a lesser amount. The result is a resolution reduction of approximately 0.7 fs rather than 0.5 fs.

In one embodiment, the lattice structure changes, or alternates at a predetermined rate (e.g., once per frame). As shown in FIG. 3, the rows of the lattice structure alternate between a L/R and a R/L patterns (a frame pattern of L/R-R/L). The entire structure may also be alternated between different frame patterns. For example, a first frame comprises the L/R-R/L pattern and the second frame comprises a R/L-L/R pattern.

Once the lattice is populated with pixels in the prescribed manner, the images are presented to an image encoder. The left and right image sequences are temporally related and can make use of encoders such as MPEG encoders, JPEG encoders, or any other encoders used in video compression. In one embodiment, colorspace conversion and chrominance sub-sampling are utilized during the encoding step (e.g., encoder 115).

Data produced by the image encoder 230 (e.g., a 3D encoded monoscopic pattern) is then packaged using a common transport mechanism by packaging system 240. The transport mechanism is, for example, an MPEG-2 transport stream or program stream. The net result of the packaging step is to create a method where backward compatibility is preserved with deployed systems. While the preferred embodiment is designed for HD-DVD or Blu-ray discs, the properly packaged data can be delivered using any digital streaming method such as the internet or conventional digital television broadcasting. Broadcasting can take the form of terrestrial broadcasting, closed cable delivery systems, or satellite delivery systems.

The decode side of the system comprises a reverse of the encode side. The delivered bit stream is presented to the decode apparatus by the distribution system. The encoded image data is extracted using a demultiplexer and delivered to an image decoder. The image decoder converts the compressed bitstream into the stereoscopic image data still in the lattice structure. The lattice structure is then transmitted to the display for final decoding into the left and right image pairs.

The decoding of the image is realized by removing the image data from the lattice structure and up sampling to the original image sizes (e.g., 3D processing 160 includes, for example, separates portions of the lattice structure related to each image and up-converts those samples to create the full images). The left and right image pairs are then presented to the viewer by, for example, displaying each image in separate “flashes” on a display screen, interlacing the individual images into a frame to be displayed, or other techniques.

The use of the lattice structure provides the stereoscopic functionality to existing HD-DVD and Blu-ray players while not obsolescing the installed players. The system can employ messaging to configure the players to automatically provide the stereoscopic data to the display. These messages can be embedded in the bitstream in any number of ways including special SEI messages, MPEG private data, or as Java code in the stream.

Although the present invention has been described herein with reference to stereographic displays, the discussion herein also applies to the coding, transmission, and decoding of multiple images in general. In fact, the present invention specifically includes embodiments with multiple images. In one embodiment, a Blu-ray disk (or other medium) according to the present invention may include, for example, both 2D and 3D versions of a movie or other production. In another embodiment, two separate 2D versions are included on the medium (e.g., left and right views) making the system compatible with systems with multiple decoders and do not wish to use the selected lattice or checkerboard pattern (for whatever reason).

The bitrate between separate versions may allocated, for example, according to the complexity of each version. Complexity could be estimated given a variety of methods including MCTF preanalysis, basic encoding (i.e. intra) using the same quantization parameters and bitrate ratio computation, or could just be based on user input or other factors. In a different embodiment, this could be done in a way to achieve a certain “average” distortion in either stream (this can be the same or could be adjusted given a model or user input).

In describing preferred embodiments of the present invention illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology is employed for the sake of clarity. However, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the specific terminology so selected, and it is to be understood that each specific element includes all technical equivalents which operate in a similar manner. For example, when describing a Blu-ray player, any other equivalent device, such as DVD players, HD-DVD players, devices that deliver content (including memory devices, memory sticks, cameras, I-pods, etc), or other device having an equivalent function or capability, whether or not listed herein, may be substituted therewith.

Furthermore, the inventors recognize that newly developed technologies not now known may also be substituted for the described parts and still not depart from the scope of the present invention. In fact the present invention specifically envisions application to new video standards and the like not yet known or published. All other described items and other equivalents, including, but not limited to sampling, filters, transmission protocols, storage protocols/formats, encoders, and displays (e.g., LCD, LCoS, Plasma, cinema projection, cinema projection processors/servers, cinema storage devices, DLP devices, etc) should also be considered in light of any and all available equivalents.

Portions of the present invention may be conveniently implemented using a conventional general purpose or a specialized digital computer or microprocessor programmed according to the teachings of the present disclosure, as will be apparent to those skilled in the computer art.

Appropriate software coding can readily be prepared by skilled programmers based on the teachings of the present disclosure, as will be apparent to those skilled in the software art. The invention may also be implemented by the preparation of application specific integrated circuits or by interconnecting an appropriate network of conventional component circuits, as will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art based on the present disclosure.

The present invention includes a computer program product which is a storage medium (media) having instructions stored thereon/in which can be used to control, or cause, a computer to perform any of the processes of the present invention. The storage medium can include, but is not limited to, any type of disk including floppy disks, mini disks (MD's), optical discs, DVD, HD-DVD, Blu-ray, CD-ROMS, CD or DVD RW+/−, micro-drive, and magneto-optical disks, ROMs, RAMS, EPROMs, EEPROMs, DRAMs, VRAMs, flash memory devices (including flash cards, memory sticks), magnetic or optical cards, SIM cards, MEMS, nanosystems (including molecular memory ICs), RAID devices, remote data storage/archive/warehousing, or any type of media or device suitable for storing instructions and/or data.

Stored on any one of the computer readable medium (media), the present invention includes software for controlling both the hardware of the general purpose/specialized computer or microprocessor, and for enabling the computer or microprocessor to interact with a human user or other mechanism utilizing the results of the present invention. Such software may include, but is not limited to, device drivers, operating systems, and user applications. Ultimately, such computer readable media further includes software for performing the present invention, as described above.

Included in the programming (software) of the general/specialized computer or microprocessor are software modules for implementing the teachings of the present invention, including, but not limited to, sampling images, filtering image data, encoding multi-image data into predetermined patterns, encoding multi-image data into a lattice (or checkerboard structure), encoding a multi-image structure into a monoscopic image format, decoding monoscopic encoded data and expanding the decoded data into multiple (e.g., stereo 3D) images and the display, storage, or communication of results according to the processes of the present invention.

The present invention may suitably comprise, consist of, or consist essentially of, any of element (the various parts or features of the invention) and their equivalents as described herein. Further, the present invention illustratively disclosed herein may be practiced in the absence of any element, whether or not specifically disclosed herein.

Various embodiments of the present invention may relate to one or more of the Enumerated Example Embodiments (EEEs) below, each of which are examples, and, as with any other related discussion provided above, should not be construed as limiting any claim or claims provided yet further below as they stand now or as later amended, replaced, or added. Likewise, these examples should not be considered as limiting with respect to any claim or claims of any related patents and/or patent applications (including any foreign or international counterpart applications and/or patents, divisionals, continuations, re-issues, etc.). Examples:

Enumerated Example Embodiment 1 (EEE1). A method, comprising the step of embedding a stereoscopic signal in a monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure.

EEE2. The method according to EEE1, wherein the monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure comprises a monoscopic-compatible signal.

EEE3. The method according to EEE1, wherein the stereoscopic signal comprises a bit pattern of a stereoscopic pair of images.

EEE4. The method according to EEE1, further comprising the step of reducing pixels of a pair of stereoscopic images to be embedded in the video infrastructure.

EEE5. The method according to EEE4, wherein the step of reducing pixels comprises subsampling the pair of stereoscopic images and placing the subsamples in a frame of the video infrastructure.

EEE6. The method according to EEE4, wherein the step of reducing pixels comprises filtering the pair of stereoscopic images and mixing the filtered images into a single frame of the video infrastructure.

EEE7. The method according to EEE5, wherein the subsampling is performed on coincident samples of the stereoscopic images.

EEE8. The method according to EEE5, wherein the subsampling is performed on related samples of the stereoscopic images.

EEE9. The method according to EEE8, wherein the subsampling of a first of the stereoscopic images is offset from the subsampling of a second of the stereoscopic images.

EEE10. The method according to EEE8, wherein the locations of subsampling of a first of the stereoscopic images is alternated with locations of subsampling of a second of the stereoscopic images.

EEE11. The method according to EEE10, further comprising the step of arranging the subsamples in a lattice structure in a frame of the video infrastructure.

EEE12. The method according to EEE11, wherein each subsample is placed in a corresponding location in the lattice structure occupied by the subsample in the image from which it was subsampled.

EEE13. The method according to EEE5, wherein the subsampling is repeated for subsequent stereoscopic pairs of images in the stereoscopic signal.

EEE14. The method according to EEE5, wherein the step of subsampling comprises at least two subsampling patterns and the pattern used for subsampling any particular image of the pair of stereoscopic, images is alternated with the subsampling pattern used to subsample the other image.

EEE15. The method according to EEE5, further comprising the step of selecting a subsampling pattern.

EEE16. The method according to EEE15, wherein the subsampling pattern is selected based on image content.

EEE17. The method according to EEE1, further comprising the step of reordering pixels from a pair of stereoscopic images of the stereoscopic signal into a single image.

EEE18. The method according to EEE1, wherein the existing video infrastructure comprises at least one of a Blu-ray compatible video format, and HD-DVD compatible video format, an Internet transmission format, a Direct-TV compatible video format, and an ATSC compatible video format.

EEE19. A method, comprising the steps of:

reducing pixels of a pair of stereoscopic images;

formatting the reduced pixels into an image pattern; and encoding the image pattern as a frame in a monoscopic video format.

EEE20. The method according to EEE19, wherein the step of reducing pixels comprises subsampling the stereoscopic images.

EEE21. The method according to EEE20, wherein the step of subsampling comprises sampling half of the pixels in a first of the stereoscopic images and subsampling half of the pixels in a second of the stereoscopic images.

EEE22. The method according to EEE21, wherein the subsampled pixels of the first image are at locations in the first image adjacent to corresponding locations subsampled in the second image.

EEE23. The method according to EEE19, wherein the image pattern comprises a lattice pattern of pixels comprising a checkerboard wherein “black” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived from a first image of the stereoscopic pair of images and “red” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived from a second image of the stereoscopic pair of images

EEE24. The method according to EEE23, wherein a location of the pixels in the lattice pattern comprises a coincident location in the image from which they were derived.

EEE25. The method according to EEE19, wherein the monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure comprises an ATSC signal format.

EEE26. The method according to EEE19, wherein the monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure comprises a Blu-ray compatible format.

EEE27. The method according to EEE19, wherein the monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure comprises an existing video format.

EEE28. The method according to EEE19, wherein the monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure comprises a new video format.

EEE29. The method according to EEE19, further comprising the step of decoding the encoded frame in a manner that reproduces the pair of stereoscopic images.

EEE30. The method according to EEE23, further comprising the step of decoding the “black” pixels into a first channel of a stereoscopic image and decoding the “white” pixels into a second channel of the stereoscopic image.

EEE31. The method according to EEE30, further comprising the step of displaying the first and second channels of the stereoscopic image.

EEE32. An encoding device, comprising:

an input port configured to receive a bit pattern comprising stereoscopic image pairs to be encoded;

an encoder configured to place at least portions of each stereoscopic image pair into a monoscopic-compatible video encoded bit stream.

EEE33. The encoding device according to EEE32, wherein the encoder is configured to produce a lattice structure comprising portions of each image of a stereoscopic image pair.

EEE34. The encoding device according to EEE33, wherein the lattice structure comprises enough data from each of the stereoscopic image pairs to reproduce the image pairs.

EEE35. The encoding device according to EEE32, wherein the portions of each stereoscopic image pair comprise a reduction and reordering of pixels in the image pair.

EEE36. The encoding device according to EEE35, wherein the reduction and reordering of pixels comprises alternately subsampling each of the images and placing the subsamples in locations of a lattice structure corresponding to the locations of the image from which they were subsampled.

EEE37. The encoding device according to EEE32, wherein the monoscopic-compatible video encoded bit stream comprises at least one of an ATSC format, a Blu-ray format, an HD-DVD format, an existing video format, and another video format.

EEE38. A decoding device, comprising:

an input port configured to receive a monoscopic formatted image signal;

a processor configured to decode the monoscopic formatted image signal; and

an image separator configured to extract a first image from each frame of the decoded monoscopic formatted image signal and extract a second image from each frame of the decoded monoscopic formatted image.

EEE39. the decoding device according to EEE38, further comprising an image expander configured to expand each extracted image to a full frame of a target device.

EEE40. The decoding device according to EEE39, wherein the target device comprises one of a display, an HDTV display, a cinema display, a cell phone display, a computer display.

EEE41. The decoding device according to EEE38, wherein the first image is extracted from a set of pixels dispersed in a pattern throughout the decoded monoscopic formatted image.

EEE42. The decoding device according to EEE38, wherein the image extractor is configured to extract pixels from the decoded monoscopic formatted image from a checkerboard pattern within the decoded monoscopic formatted image wherein “black” pixels of the checkerboard pattern are extracted to form the first image and “white” pixels of the checkerboard pattern are extracted to form the second image.

EEE43. The decoding device according to EEE38, wherein the decoding device is part of a larger media system comprising a display and the image extractor is configured to extract pixels from the decoded monoscopic formatted image from a checkerboard pattern.

Obviously, numerous modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope of claims to be included in a subsequently filed utility patent application, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein. 

The invention claimed is:
 1. A system for encoding images, comprising an encoder configured to encode multi-view stereoscopic image data into a monoscopic video format, wherein the system is configured to reduce pixels of a pair of stereoscopic images, format the reduced pixels into an image pattern, and encode the image pattern as a frame in the monoscopic video format, wherein the image pattern alternates, at a predetermined rate, between a first lattice of pixels and a second lattice of pixels, the first lattice of pixels comprising a checkerboard wherein “black” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived form a first image of the stereoscopic pair of images and “white” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived from a second image of the stereoscopic pair of images, and the second lattice of pixels comprising a checkerboard wherein “white” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived form the first image of the stereoscopic pair of images and “black” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived from the second image of the stereoscopic pair of images.
 2. The system according to claim 1, wherein the system is further configured to sample a portion of the pixels in a first of the stereoscopic images and subsample a portion of the pixels in a second of the stereoscopic images, and the subsampled pixels of the first image are at locations in the first image adjacent to corresponding locations subsampled in the second image.
 3. The system according to claim 1, wherein a location of the pixels in the lattice pattern comprises a coincident location in the image from which they were derived.
 4. An encoding device, comprising: an input port configured to receive a bit pattern comprising stereoscopic image pairs to be encoded; and an encoder configured to place at least portions of each stereoscopic image pair into a monoscopic-compatible video encoded bit stream; wherein the portions of each stereoscopic image pair comprise a reduction and reordering of pixels in the image pair comprising alternately subsampling each of the images and placing the subsamples in locations of a structure corresponding to the locations of the image from which they were subsampled, and the structure comprises a first frame pattern and a second frame pattern that alternate between frames of the monoscopic-compatible video encoded bit stream, wherein: each line of the first and second frame patterns is arranged either in an L/R pattern in which left and right subsamples are arranged in alternating order, starting with a left subsample, or in an R/L pattern in which right and left subsamples are arranged in alternating order, starting with a right subsample, the lines of the first frame pattern alternate between an L/R pattern and an R/L pattern, starting with an L/R pattern, and the lines of the second frame pattern alternate between an R/L pattern and an L/R pattern, starting with an R/L pattern.
 5. A video system, comprising: an input port configured to receive a monoscopic formatted image signal; a processor configured to decode the monoscopic formatted image signal; and an image separator configured to extract a first image from each frame of the decoded monoscopic formatted image signal and extract a second image from each frame of the decoded monoscopic formatted image, wherein the image separator is configured to extract pixels from the decoded monoscopic formatted image according to a lattice structure that alternates at a predetermined rate between a first lattice structure and a second lattice structure, the first lattice structure comprising a checkerboard pattern within the decoded monoscopic formatted image wherein “black” pixels of the checkerboard pattern are extracted to form the first image and “white” pixels of the checkerboard pattern are extracted to form the second image, and the second lattice structure comprising a checkerboard pattern within the decoded monoscopic formatted image wherein “white” pixels of the checkerboard pattern are extracted to form the first image and “black” pixels of the checkerboard pattern are extracted to form the second image.
 6. The video system according to claim 5, wherein the video system is embedded in a mobile phone.
 7. The video system according to claim 5, wherein the image separator is configured to extract pixels from the decoded monoscopic format from a pattern selected by an encoding process of the monoscopic video format.
 8. A method, comprising the steps of: decoding, by a monoscopic decoder, a monoscopic format image signal of a monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure, recognizing, by a pattern recognizer, the decoded signal as being either a standard monoscopic video encoded signal or a monoscopic packaged 3D encoded signal, and routing the decoded signal based on the recognition either to 2D display processing for standard monoscopic video or to 3D display processing for monscopic packaged 3D video; wherein, when the decoded signal is a monoscopic packaged 3D encoded signal, the monscopic format image signal comprises an image pattern that alternates, at a predetermined rate, between a first lattice of pixels and a second lattice of pixels, the first lattice of pixels comprising a checkerboard wherein “black” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived form a first image of a stereoscopic pair of images and “white” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived from a second image of the stereoscopic pair of images, and the second lattice of pixels comprising a checkerboard wherein “white” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived from the first image of the stereoscopic pair of images and “black” pixels of the checkerboard comprise pixels derived from the second image of the stereoscopic pair of images.
 9. The method according to claim 8, wherein the recognition is performed by comparing adjacent or otherwise related pixels in a decompressed pattern.
 10. The method according to claim 8, wherein the recognition is performed by constructing two entire images based on a 3D encoded monoscopic pattern and comparing the resulting images.
 11. The method according to claim 8, further comprising: reducing pixels of a pair of stereoscopic images; and embedding the pair of stereoscopic images in the monoscopic format image signal of the monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure.
 12. The method according to claim 11, wherein the step of reducing pixels comprises filtering the pair of stereoscopic images and mixing the filtered images into a single frame of the video infrastructure.
 13. The method according to claim 11, wherein the step of reducing pixels comprises sub sampling performed on coincident samples of the stereoscopic images.
 14. The method according to claim 11, wherein the step of reducing pixels comprises sub sampling performed on related samples of the stereoscopic images.
 15. The method according to claim 14, wherein the subsampling of a first of the stereoscopic images is offset from the subsampling of a second of the stereoscopic images.
 16. The method according to claim 14, wherein the locations of subsampling of a first of the stereoscopic images is alternated with locations of subsampling of a second of the stereoscopic images.
 17. The method according to claim 14, wherein the step of subsampling comprises at least two subsampling patterns and the pattern used for subsampling any particular image of the pair of stereoscopic images is alternated with the sub sampling pattern used to subsample the other image.
 18. The method according to claim 14, further comprising the step of selecting a subsampling pattern.
 19. The method according to claim 18, wherein the subsampling pattern is selected based on image content.
 20. The method according to claim 18, wherein the monoscopic-compatible video infrastructure comprises at least one of a Blu-ray compatible video format, an HD-DVD compatible video format, an Internet transmission format, a DirectTV compatible video format, an ATSC compatible video format, an existing video format, and a newly developed video format. 